No. I sometimes add a very small quantity of benzotriazole to highly dilute HC-110 to act as a toe cutter for very low contrast applications of TMX or FP4 when I want to maintain a long straight line. But it does nothing to improve acutance. But my main go-to general purpose film developer for many years now had been PMK pyro and certain other staining pyro tweaks. These certainly tame the highlight printing issues of TMax 100, but don't help its disappointing edge acutance either. Unsharp masking can be used, but is a whole secondary step. So I went back to one of my early favorite developers, Perceptol. At ordinary 1:1, same story with TMX100. But when it is diluted to 1:3 for usage, it changes its character and significantly enhances printable grain structure and edge acutance, just the right amount for TMax 100 it seems, but too much for TMY400 or Delta 100, which come out visibly gritty. With 4x5 and 8x10 sheet film, I just routinely used the 400 speed TMax instead. But with 6x9 roll film backs, being able to use TMX100 in a much more ideal way has become a real game changer for me. I get the very crisp detail snap reminiscent of Acros, but at twice the effective speed rating, and with more detail deeper down into the shadows - important for me because I've had to substitute roll film backs for long-haul backpacking trips now that 4x5 Quickload and Readyload sleeves are gone. I want my MF prints to sneak into the same 16X20 print portfolios as full 4X5 and 8X10 shots without being embarrassed. This developer tweak with TMX has done the trick, though in the darkroom I prefer printing sheet film whenever possible, over roll film.... But I'm over 70, and it's inevitable I'll be shooting smaller gear more than I used to. My days of lugging 85 and 90 lb packs over the high passes and peaks are over. Last summer I backpacked two weeks at high altitude in Wyoming, and it was more like 70 lbs. The year before I did a hundred-miler in the Kings Canyon high country around here, and took a little Fuji 6x9 RF, so got things down to around 60 lbs - the lightest pack I've actually backpacked with in the past 40 yrs. One has to be prepared with sufficient food an equipment. I did get pinned down in a blizzard for 3 days on that trip. In fact, ten out of the twelve last years I've been in serious blizzards in the mountains. Any month of the year can bring winter conditions. I ended up joining an August search for two missing hikers in Sequoia high country a few years ago. They were found, but too late, already dead from hypothermia - dayhikers who walked off under a blue sky, then got caught in summer snowfall without a parka, jacket, or serious footwear. Happens every year to someone.